There is a small amount of ammonia in urine. Ammonia is not converted to urine.
converting
There is a major process. We call it habor process.
There is a industrial process. WE call it habor process.
The Haber process.
The process is called nitrogen fixation, where nitrogen gas (N2) is converted into ammonia (NH3) by certain bacteria, such as Rhizobium and Azotobacter, or by non-biological means using the Haber-Bosch process.
Urine was used for the ammonia content in the dye-ing industry. However there are more effecient and ways of producing ammonia these days. There would be very little call for it now. Fresh Human urine was used in the dye process in the middle ages. But since there are ways to replicate the chemicals like ammonia, urea and phosphate in modern times it's no longer required for the process.
You could call it writing a number in different forms.
Ammonia in water can come from natural sources like decaying organic matter or from human activities like agricultural runoff and wastewater discharges. It can also be produced by biological processes, such as the breakdown of proteins by bacteria.
Call your poison center quick and ask.
Liquor ammonia is a blend of ammonia, water, and other materials. It's a by-product of some petroleum distillation processes. Liquid ammonia (agriculture users usually call it anhydrous ammonia) is pure ammonia (NH3) gas chilled and condensed into its liquid form.
dont you know your not supposed to mix ammonia and bleach?!? it can cause serious illness!!! call a poison center or something.
What most people call "ammonia" is actually a solution of what chemists call ammonia in water. If you mix household ammonia with lighter fluid, they won't mix. Lighter fluid is probably (mostly) butane, which is not exactly miscible with water. I'm not actually positive whether it's miscible with "real" ammonia or not in the liquid state, but I doubt it; ammonia is polar and butane is not.